If you get an error, please change as follows. Before %~dp0\skse_loader.exe After hogehoge: \ Skyrim \ skse_loader.exe Please rewrite each part of hogehoge.
Using this BAT file may cause serious system instabilities eventually - I would be careful and ONLY use at your own risk. I would not use a BAT file to do this process either. There is no safe way to do this without impacting the system threads let alone what it might do to your cores. You can do this by altering your power settings just fine without a BAT file.
I used a program in 2017 that un-parks all the cores but it caused serious system issues and issues with every other game I owned it would be advisable to create a Restore Point before using this just in case. Simply adding 5% more speed or 5-10 frames is not enough when you can either remove or add mods to achieve the same result.
Thanks for the warning. I have 6 core Xeon X5680 and was hoping to squeeze some juice out of it, but after screwing up my Oblivion playthrough with mods I'm more cautious.
You should add a proper description of what this does "Changes the windows power plan to high performance when the game is ran, and back to balanced when you exit, won't change anything if you're already using high performance"
Just what i was thinking. I've been using high performance from the day i assembled my PC and all my cores are activated. I guess this is just an alternative.
Useful? i'm not sure. If you have an Nvidia card you can do this exact same things with the Nvidia configuration panel. You know, without injecting an estraneus C++ script in your PC from a random stranger in the internet.
It's pretty easy, really, justa a couple of clicks. Righ click on Desktop, click on "Nvidia control panel". Select "Program settings" ----> Choose Skyrim (tesv.exe) In the settings panel, select "Power management mode" ----> Choose "Prefer max performance" ??? Profit
When I open my Nvidia Control Panel, I don't see the option for Program Settings anywhere. Where do you see it, under the menus at the top or on the left side? I'm using version 8.1.940.0 of the Control Panel.
As R246 said, are you sure changing the NVIDIA Setting affects the CPU and not only the GPU ? According to NVIDIA, it's not : https://nvidia.custhelp.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/3130/~/setting-power-management-mode-from-adaptive-to-maximum-performance
30 comments
Before
%~dp0\skse_loader.exe
After
hogehoge: \ Skyrim \ skse_loader.exe
Please rewrite each part of hogehoge.
I used a program in 2017 that un-parks all the cores but it caused serious system issues and issues with every other game I owned it would be advisable to create a Restore Point before using this just in case. Simply adding 5% more speed or 5-10 frames is not enough when you can either remove or add mods to achieve the same result.
Uses all threads without using a BAT file.
"Changes the windows power plan to high performance when the game is ran, and back to balanced when you exit, won't change anything if you're already using high performance"
I get the following error a lot. It happens when I :
1) Get a CTD or Close skyrim with Ctrl+F4
2) Relaunch the script via MO2
Basically, the french line is saying "The process can't access this file because it is used by another process". Any idea why ?
F:\Jeux\Steam\steamapps\common\Skyrim>IF NOT ERRORLEVEL 1 (timeout 5 1>null ) ELSE (
set /a count+=1
powercfg.exe -setactive SCHEME_BALANCED
)
Le processus ne peut pas accéder au fichier car ce fichier est utilisé par un autre processus.
But it's still useful, thanks
It's pretty easy, really, justa a couple of clicks.
Righ click on Desktop, click on "Nvidia control panel".
Select "Program settings" ----> Choose Skyrim (tesv.exe)
In the settings panel, select "Power management mode" ----> Choose "Prefer max performance"
???
Profit
EDITED: thanks temporarilyhuman!
Thank you! Gonna correct this
C++ ? Have you even read the script ?
As R246 said, are you sure changing the NVIDIA Setting affects the CPU and not only the GPU ? According to NVIDIA, it's not :
https://nvidia.custhelp.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/3130/~/setting-power-management-mode-from-adaptive-to-maximum-performance
So yeah, it's useful to me.